Jumping from Angular1 to Angular

Open Source Your Knowledge, Become a Contributor

Unless stated otherwise, Angular in this course is version >= 2.0. Angular1 or AngularJS means version < 2.0

Installing the Angular cli

You can skip this part and go directly to The Application Module if you simply want to run all of the examples in this course online. This part helps you create and get started with an Angular project on your own computer.

The simplest way to get started with Angular is to use the Angular CLI. It is a command line interface that helps you bootstrap a project, initialize modules and components, and serve your application on a local server for development purposes.

Once you have set up NPM, you can install the Angular CLI with this command:

npm install -g @angular/cli

Then, use the new command to bootstrap a project.

ng new awesome-project

Once finished, you will have successfully created a fully functionnal Angular project. If you want to run your app on a local server, use ng serve. Let's take a look at the folder structure:

Some files are not listed in the tree above as they are not within the scope of this course. Most of them are config files used to run tests with karma or protractor. I definitely recommend looking into them later on, but for now, let's focus on:

the assets folder is where you put your graphical assets and resources (possibly some CSS sheets)

the environments folder has two files: a general config file and a production config file. You can use them to set different config values (like API tokens or log levels) between run environments

index.html is the root HTML template for the page

main.ts is the entry point for the application. It calls the ‘AppModule’ we're going to study in this lesson

the app contains the sources for your app and is where you will create your components. The best structure I have found is to create a components folder and then creating a subfolder per component within which contains scripts, templates and styles for the component. The main file we are going to focus on in this lesson is app.module.ts.

The first six lines are import statements, mainly from the @angular packages. Note that we must also import the main component for our app, AppComponent.

The class AppModule has the @NgModule decorator, which makes it our Angular module. This module itself imports some other modules through its own imports properties. These modules are part of Angular but you will use this property to import third-party modules or even your own if your app consists of separate modules.

declarations lists the components we are going to package with our app. Note that our main component, AppComponent, is included.

providers is used to register providers to the Dependency Injection System. We will visit this in-depth during the next few lessons.

Finally, bootstrap defines the entry point for the module, the component that will be used as the root of the module. The module itself is referenced in main.ts with the line:

platformBrowserDynamic().bootstrapModule(AppModule);

It defines that the main module of the app will be the AppModule class.

An @NgModule in Angular 2 is very similar to the angular.module() in Angular 1, you use it to declare dependencies and components for your app.